Oh. So it’s not that the feed will go bad cuz I’ve never experienced that or the exploding. I use a 5 gallon bucket to feed 50 pullets hens and roosters and just keep blackslopping
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We hadn't thought of using FF, but I'm ready all this information and think we may very well benefit. We'd like to use our current mix, not sure what to do to get started. Unfortunately, I'm one of those who need very clear step by step instructions. We currently feed a 1/3 mix of scratch, layer, and grower.
I have read this, but biggest thing is I have a hard time picture what something is suppose to look like from just words. I really could use some pics of the multi-bucket idea. Also, one thing that I didnt see asked and answered, do you stir before feeding or drain water of the top before feeding it there is water on top. Also, saw where someone said you can use brown sugar instead of ACV.https://tikktok.wordpress.com/2014/04/13/fermented-feed-faq/
^^^ One of the best things you'll read on FF. You'll need to experiment to find the right system for you, but the basics are;
Mix feed and water.
Let it sit for several day.
Feed.
You can have several batches going at once in different tubs, or reuse the same tub, leaving a little of the last batch in to kickstart the new batch and it will be ready within 24 hours. You can feed a little every three days, some every day, all FF with no dry... There's no set way of doing it. You need to work out your own best way of doing it for you.
A note on chlorinated water; my water is chlorinated (though I believe in the UK our levels are lower, I'm not sure so don't quote me), and I just use it straight from the tap.
I scoop it out of the container with a slotted spoon. I ferment mixed grain, and when done it still looks like grain but plumper, brighter, and some grains have started to sprout. Sometimes you get a white film on the top; apparently that it a sort of yeast that is not harmful, if unsightly. Scoop it off or stir it in, as suits you. You don't need (want?) AVC or brown sugar in it; just grain and water and time - like french bread!I have read this, but biggest thing is I have a hard time picture what something is suppose to look like from just words. I really could use some pics of the multi-bucket idea. Also, one thing that I didnt see asked and answered, do you stir before feeding or drain water of the top before feeding it there is water on top. Also, saw where someone said you can use brown sugar instead of ACV.
in this method the water is soaked inI have read this, but biggest thing is I have a hard time picture what something is suppose to look like from just words. I really could use some pics of the multi-bucket idea. Also, one thing that I didnt see asked and answered, do you stir before feeding or drain water of the top before feeding it there is water on top. Also, saw where someone said you can use brown sugar instead of ACV.
I really could use some pics of the multi-bucket idea.
Also, one thing that I didnt see asked and answered, do you stir before feeding
or drain water of the top before feeding it there is water on top.
Also, saw where someone said you can use brown sugar instead of ACV.
Thank you very much for all of the input. I will probably start a batch this evening and see how it goes.@scawthon74 I know you said you need exact instructions but unfortunately that's not something you'll get for FF. Everyone has their own methods that work best for their circumstances. You have to work out which way is best for you. It's kind of like cooking. Ask a room full of people the perfect way to make an omelette. There will be no consensus**.
The only exact instructions you can really get are;
Use a food grade container.
Use whatever feed you are using now.
Add water.
Let it ferment.
Feed.
Within that are billions of variations and no one can tell you what will be right for you. You have to just jump in, start experimenting, and tweak what you're doing until you find a method that suits.
I don't want to sound rude here but... have you tried Google image search?
This article might be what you're after; http://www.theeasyhomestead.com/fermented-chicken-feed/
But as TikkTok said in their article; that method is overly complicated. Why make life more complicated?
I give it a good big stir before I feed, so it's all nice and even. But that's up to you and your methods. I give my tub a poke whenever I'm near it as well, as it lives in the kitchen and I'm terrible at leaving things alone.
That's again up to you. How do you want to feed it, wet or not? How do the chickens prefer it? Soupy, mushy, as dry as possible? It's just experimentation.
I started with the very wet method, but it was a pain in the butt draining it, and the chickens didn't like it soupy. So I use the method explained in the article I linked, where you don't have lots of buckets, and lots of water. Just one bucket, a water to feed ratio of 1:1, and a spoon.
There are no hard and fast rules except feed + water + time. The rest is up to your own preferences.
Don't use sugar, you'll give yeasts and "bad bacteria" a head start. Don't use ACV, you're just wasting your ACV. As the article I linked said; the bacteria you want is in the air. The feed is what it will consume. You just need feed, water, and time.
I'd take pictures of my incredibly simple setup but I'm currently using an in feed wormer, so I'm fermenting slightly differently.
**I like Spanish style over French style (eugh, runny, luke warm eggs). Onions fried off before hand, then mixed into the egg, with grated cheese and a bit of water, salt and pepper, and then all of it cooked in butter. Peppers are optional. Ketchup is a must. Don't tell me ketchup doesn't go with eggs.